There is a mass of artic air coming down out of Canada from Siberia. This mass of air will reach us here in the Carolinas around Christmas (Friday, Saturday) and will cause tempurtures to be in the low teens and wind chills to be in the negative numbers if the weather forcasts are accurate, but most assuradly will change as the week moves forward.
This should not cause any changes to the work schedule as we will not be operating the week of Christmas due to reduced order volume.
There will be new posts made if changes in work schedule is needed. Please check back often.
Current as of 8:00am 20221219 weather forcast from weather.gov below:
Short Range Forecast Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 258 AM EST Mon Dec 19 2022
Valid 12Z Mon Dec 19 2022 - 12Z Wed Dec 21 2022
…Bitterly cold temperatures to overtake the eastern Washington and the Northern Rockies with dangerously cold wind chills across the Northern Plains…
…Snow for higher elevations of the Northwest, Upper Great Lakes, and interior Northeast…
…Damp and stormy along the Gulf Coast; confidence is growing in a powerful winter storm to impact much of the eastern two-thirds of the country late week…
The first half of the week starts off on a chilly note across the majority of the Lower 48. This is due to areas of high pressure; one over the eastern half of the continental U.S. and a strong Arctic high over southwestern Canada. The Arctic front continues to inch its way south through the Northwest and Northern Plains with bitterly cold temperatures associated with the Arctic high located north of the front. Monday’s daytime highs over central and eastern Montana will struggle to get above zero today, while daytime lows ranging from 0 to -15 degrees will be common from eastern Washington to the Upper Mississippi Valley. By Tuesday, the core of the exceptionally colder temperatures in the Canadian Prairies pushes even more into the northern High Plains with dangerously cold and windy conditions. Daytime lows on Tuesday dip as low as -20 to -30 in parts of Montana, with sub-zero lows bleeding more into the central High Plains. Blustery winds throughout the region are responsible for bone-chilling wind chills, ranging as cold as -30 to even -60 degrees. This has prompted the issuance of numerous Wind Chill Warnings, Advisories, and Watches across the northern High Plains that will likely be in effect for much of the week.
With such impressively cold temperatures present, wintry precipitation is also expected in some portions of the northern U.S.. In the Northeast, lake effect snow showers stick around one more day as Lake Effect Snow Warnings are out down wind of Lakes Erie and Ontario with several more inches of snow possible through Monday afternoon. Northern Maine is also likely to see light snow accumulations from a nearly stationary wave of low pressure off the coast of Nova Scotia. In the Midwest, a frontal system tracking northeast today will aid in developing periods of light snow from eastern Kansas on north to northern Minnesota and the Upper Great Lakes. The heaviest snowfall is set to occur in the northern Rockies where strong upslope flow from brisk easterly winds will lead to multiple days of heavy snowfall. The heaviest of which comes on Tuesday, when a combination of the upsloping winds and an injection of Pacific moisture running into the bitterly cold air-mass in place results in an expansive area of heavy snowfall. Latest WPC snowfall probabilities show 60-80% odds for >8" of snow in the Cascade Range, the Bitterroots, the Lewis Range, and the Tetons on Tuesday. A combination of Winter Storm Warnings, Advisories, and Watches have been issued in for this mulit-day snowfall event.
Farther south, an organizing wave of low pressure will traverse the Gulf of Mexico and produce widespread showers and and thunderstorms along the Gulf Coast. WPC has issued Marginal Risks for Excessive Rainfall for today from eastern Texas to the central Gulf Coast, then from the mouth of the Mississippi River to much of the coastal Southeast. This storm will be fairly progressive, eventually tracking into the Bahamas by mid-week. After this storm system exits, attention turns to the Nation’s Heartland where confidence continues to grow in a powerful winter storm developing the second half of the week. Disruptive snowfall accumulations, damaging wind gusts, and bitterly cold temperatures in the storm’s wake are expected. Please continue to monitor NWS forecasts closely throughout the week as this storm is likely to produce extensive travel delays before the holiday weekend.
Mullinax
Graphics available at https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/basicwx/basicwx_ndfd.php